Side-by-side comparison of mechanisms, dosing, interactions, and stacking potential.
| Boron | Molybdenum | |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Minerals | Minerals |
| Standard Dose | 3-6mg daily | 75-250 mcg daily |
| Timing | With meals. Often taken with Vitamin D/K stack. | With meals. Often included in multimineral formulas. |
| Cycle Duration | ongoing | ongoing (via multimineral) |
| Evidence Level | moderate_human | moderate_human |
Boron influences calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus metabolism, likely through effects on cell membrane function and transmembrane signaling. It reduces urinary calcium and magnesium excretion, increases serum 25(OH)D and estradiol levels, reduces SHBG (sex hormone-binding globulin) thereby increasing free testosterone, and inhibits inflammatory markers (CRP, TNF-alpha) via NF-kB modulation. Boron also inhibits serine proteases and may modulate the activity of steroid hormone hydroxylases. It plays a role in bone formation by influencing osteoblast and osteoclast activity.
3-6mg daily
With meals. Often taken with Vitamin D/K stack.
ongoing
Molybdenum is the essential cofactor for three human enzymes: sulfite oxidase (converts toxic sulfite to sulfate — critical for sulfur amino acid metabolism), xanthine oxidase (purine catabolism to uric acid), and aldehyde oxidase (aldehyde detoxification, drug metabolism). The molybdenum cofactor (Moco) requires molybdopterin as a carrier. Sulfite oxidase is the most clinically significant — sulfite accumulation is neurotoxic. Molybdenum also plays a role in the metabolism of sulfur-containing amino acids and may support phase I/II detoxification pathways.
75-250 mcg daily
With meals. Often included in multimineral formulas.
ongoing (via multimineral)
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